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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty patients with known malignancies, back pain, abnormal roentgenograms of the spine, and normal neurological examinations were evaluated by outpatient computed tomographic (CT) myelography to determine the presence and extent of epidural tumor. Spinal CT following the intrathecal administration of low doses of water soluble contrast agents provided high quality diagnostic information. Three patients experienced adverse effects from this procedure which were mild and easily managed in the outpatient setting.
Epidural tumor
was identified in 15 of 20 (75%) patients. Patients were followed for 9-27 months following myelography. The 14 patients with epidural tumor treated with local radiation experienced
pain
relief and only one of these patients developed signs or symptoms of recurrent epidural tumor in the treated site. This study documents the high incidence of epidural tumor in selected patients without neurological deficits and the excellent palliative results of non-emergent, carefully planned radiation therapy. It also demonstrates that high resolution CT myelography can be performed safely in an outpatient setting in patients at high risk for epidural tumor. Outpatient myelography facilitates the early diagnosis of epidural tumor and provides needed information on the extent of the tumor for radiation treatment planning while conserving health care resources. For these reasons, outpatient CT myelography should be considered in selected patients with cancer who are at high risk for epidural metastases.
...
PMID:Early diagnosis of spinal epidural metastases using out-patient computed tomographic myelography. 169 89
Metastatic plexopathy is often a disabling accompaniment of advanced systemic cancer and may involve any of the peripheral nerve plexus. Brachial plexopathy most commonly occurs in carcinoma of the breast and lung; lumbosacral plexopathy is most common with colorectal and gynecologic tumors, sarcomas, and lymphomas. Regardless of the location, carcinomatous plexopathy typically is associated with severe unrelenting
pain
as the cardinal clinical feature. Later, weakness and focal sensory disturbances occur in the distribution of plexuses involvement.
Epidural tumor
involvement frequently (in more than 50% of patients) coexists with either plexopathy. In previously treated patients, the main differential diagnostic consideration is radiation-induced plexopathy. Treatment of metastatic plexopathy is palliative and includes radiotherapy to the tumor mass and chemotherapy. In selected patients, subtotal surgical resection of the tumor may be warranted. The response to therapy is modest and generally short lived. Efforts should be made to provide adequate
pain
control, to maximize remaining neurologic function, and to prevent complications of immobility produced by the neuromuscular dysfunction.
...
PMID:Nerve plexus metastases. 172 1